Okay. On the urban indigenous housing, to keep it short, I agree with what Mr. Morrison said, and I think that's a big missing piece.
It's interesting, because Alberta is a living case study of the effectiveness of the right to housing. Alberta has seen province-wide reductions in homelessness. The City of Edmonton has reduced homelessness the most of any city in Canada: 43% in nine years. That's by taking a rights-based approach to housing. It treats people as rights holders so they don't need to transition through a bunch of different steps to get into housing. They're given an apartment and provided the important supports they need, so a rights-based approach has been proven to be the most effective approach in reducing homelessness.
When it comes to women fleeing violence, many of the same principles apply. Housing policy is necessarily a partnership between the federal and the provincial governments. In most cases, provincial governments can provide the supports, and Alberta has done that really well. You do need housing specifically targeted to women fleeing violence and people who are experiencing homelessness, and the supports have to be there. In a rights-based approach, you would prioritize those populations for housing, which would free up provincial dollars, frankly, to provide those necessary supports.